Dreamina: The "CapCut" of AI Art Is Here (And It’s Generous)
Dreamina is essentially the CapCut of AI image generation: fast, surprisingly powerful, and built to churn out social media assets without a headache. The killer feature isn't just the quality—it's the ~150 free daily credits, which refreshes every 24 hours rather than forcing you to hoard a monthly allowance.
🎨 What It Actually Does
- Text-to-Image/Video: You type a prompt, it spits out visuals. The secret sauce is its "TikTok aesthetic"—colors are punchy, and compositions are ready for vertical screens.
- Canvas Editing: [Smart Inpainting] – Instead of re-rolling an entire image because the hands are weird, you can highlight just the glitch and ask Dreamina to fix it.
- Upscale & Expand: [Resolution Boosting] – Turns grainy drafts into crisp, usable assets. The "Expand" feature is particularly useful for changing a square image into a 9:16 Story format without cropping.
The Real Cost (Free vs. Paid)
The "daily refresh" model is the biggest draw here. Most competitors give you a monthly bucket that runs dry in a week; Dreamina tops you up every morning.
| Plan | Cost | Key Limits/Perks |
|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | ~150 Credits/Day (Approx. 50 images). Standard speed. Non-commercial use. |
| Basic | ~$18/mo | More Credits. Commercial license included. Faster generation queues. |
How It Stacks Up
- Dreamina vs. Midjourney: Midjourney creates arguably better "fine art" and textures, but it lives in Discord and costs money upfront. Dreamina is free to start and has a proper web interface.
- Dreamina vs. Ideogram: If you need perfect text (like a sign that actually spells "Coffee" correctly), Ideogram is still the king. Dreamina is better for characters, vibes, and video assets.
- Dreamina vs. Leonardo.ai: Leonardo offers more granular control for power users (ControlNet, weird settings). Dreamina is for people who just want a good result now without tweaking 50 sliders.
The Verdict
Dreamina represents the "CapCut-ification" of generative AI. It isn't trying to replace the artist in the studio; it's trying to arm the creator in the coffee shop. By resetting credits daily, it encourages play and iteration in a way that stingy monthly quotas don't. It’s not the tool you use to generate a billboard for Times Square, but for the daily grind of thumbnails, mood boards, and social posts, it is unbeatable.

